For getting the list of ip addresses associated, you can use netstat command
netstat -rn
This gives a long list of ip addresses and it is not easy to find the required field. The sample result is as following:
Routing tables
Internet:
Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
default 192.168.195.1 UGSc 17 0 en2
127 127.0.0.1 UCS 0 0 lo0
127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 1 254107 lo0
169.254 link#7 UCS 0 0 en2
192.168.195 link#7 UCS 3 0 en2
192.168.195.1 0:27:22:67:35:ee UHLWIi 22 397 en2 1193
192.168.195.5 127.0.0.1 UHS 0 0 lo0
More result is truncated.......
The ip address of gateway is in the first line; one with default at its first column.
To display only the selected lines of result, we can use grep command along with netstat
netstat -rn | grep 'default'
This command filters and displays those lines of result having default. In this case, you can see result like following:
default 192.168.195.1 UGSc 14 0 en2
If you are interested in finding only the ip address of gateway and nothing else you can further filter the result using awk. The awk command matches pattern in the input result and displays the output. This can be useful when you are using your result directly in some program or batch job.
netstat -rn | grep 'default' | awk '{print $2}'
The awk command tells to match and print the second column of the result in the text. The final result thus looks like this:
192.168.195.1
In this case, netstat displays all result, grep only selects the line with 'default' in it, and awk further matches the pattern to display the second column in the text.
You can similarly use route -n get default command to get the required result. The full command is
route -n get default | grep 'gateway' | awk '{print $2}'
These commands work well in linux as well as unix systems and MAC OS.